The Huron News-Record, 1884-12-31, Page 1essentiesia,,
te be tast
tske
eoPefr,
11e4 iteati Nan miles**
.ranite for Cemetery
Shit dere eenspeittee
t -Irteatifeetarer of the Celebrated
Aiertelgiat.• Siva*. tor 13141illeg per.
peees in .Ceinetery Werk, wbieli must
'he.. Reim to be eppreciet*L-All work
"repented .te.eive. satisfaction.
•
$1.26 per Annum, in Advtiaioe.
allfaa
•
"INDEPENDENT IN A14. 'MINOS, NEUTRAL, IN NOTHING."
•••••.a •
•-•„.
WITITRLY & TOPA 1'4•114kgs.
VOL:VIL-NO. 4,
4”`",,, -••-•••••,•*••••4•••••,,•-••• ••••
CLINTON, 1111RON COUNTY, ONT., WED;sTESDAY, DECEMBHR 31, 1884.
WHOLE NO 319
. ,14111044111WW4WI. lellitaellaillanalliellesnenelealaileaseneseneleneinsminen
MAKING : • :-:GREAT
baring ::
attling Big Bays Since the Sale Comm
lanced. Large Parcels Going to the
North, South, East and West, is the
Order of the Day.
'
:••
•
. Previous to Removing• to
OPPMP,11\TO-
COME AND S
D• SEE
The Bargains in Silks, The Bargains in Blankets
The Bargains in Velvet, The Bargains in Comforters
The Bargains in Plushes, The Bargains in Cottons
The Bargains in Dress Goods The Bargains in Fla,nnels
The Bargains in Velveteens - The Bargains. in HOSIERY
The Bargains in Mantles The 13argains in Gloves
The Bargains in Costumes The Bargains in Ribbons
The Bargains in Shawls The Bargains in Laces
The Bargains in Millinery The Bargains in Trimmings
The Bargains in Und'rclothing AND DON'T FORGET
e r
ORDERED I
•
amples and Prides at the.]
Cor. of Huron
& Albert -Sts.,
•to enable like to escape, to avoid
prosecution for bigamy.
The people of Woodetook, Oct.,
have pulsed byelaw for the put.
uhase of Water-workii, by a majority
1 of 1,580.
Among thee° spoken of ite ounces -
ears of the late Bishop Feller are
Rev. Charism IletnIton, of Quebec,
And Dean Carmichael, of Montreal.
Le Blanc, M. -P. P„ and eornellis
er, advocate, ,,have been cemmitted
tor trial at Montreal for tampering
With two grend jurors at the asidze
to secure the refection of and indict-
ment against a newepaper for libel.
Henry Mccebe, while ellepping
in the bush- half &mile distant from
Orysier, county of Stormont, was in-
stantly killed by a tree falling on him,
His atoll was split open ,and both
arme broken,
CZ,
. .
It is ii relief to hear fromicten
that there isno fouudatien for the
report which got abroad a few dart
ago that a man dying at that place
had confessed that he had 'murdered
Peter Lazier, for. Which crime Lows
' der and , Tompsett were hanged at
Belleville slew months ago. '
Voris, Wants. to be the county town .
Of Brant. • The claims putforward
on the side of Paris are that it is
one with the 'County • on the Scott
• ' Act, whileBrantforcl is opposed to
this
Preconveniently
county
vote; . t hsaittuPe tied , 8 is far
AtelatkiO4.,•triddluiell,PXMiN. . .:-,,--..,•-••
okc4seealgavejuug:
• relent in. the,South Renfrew election
case, dismissing the appeal and bold::
ing Dr. Dowling, Grit M. P., one of
Mi. Mowits conspirators„ .dieqUali-
lied, and the election. Voided with.
Coats. Thee cross appeal, • claiming
the net for the Ceniervativecandi•-•
date, wasalso dismissed. • :
The infidel 'Paquet, . who Was
stricken with paralysis in Toronto
while arguing that there la•ne hell,
is at an hospital and not yet recov-
ered. Rev IT. M Parsons Visited,
•• •a ' la il) and read some chapters in the
.Bible to hiM". Om leaving lie was
thanked by Paquet and requested
CO call again. Prayers were offered
atlhe'prayer meeting in Shaftesbury
• Hall last nightforhe MinversOnt of
the infidel., .. . ' •
Bev. J'aines*Grant, a HitPtist min:.
later, of Paris, was officiating at the
funeral of a daughter of Baptist per-
ones, .After he. coninenced. the ser-
vices at the house, and RS tilt; funeral
•
'permit . him to proceed, sayilizit Wise
. against thelaw ofthechurch; Not
procession reached 'the graveyard
whigh surrounds . the English
- • ' ' •
Church, the ieounihent. would not
, • '
wishing to'Cauee an unseemly distur-
bance, ..Mr: Grant :withdrew, when
the incumbent noittinued the service
• at iliwgeave.
. .The Executive Committee in con-
nection with the approaching celebra-
• tido 'Of, tile fortieth anniversary Of
Sir John . Mitodonald'e entry into
. public life, to be celebrated in •Mon -
Veal On the 12th: of January, .have,'
arranged that the veteran statesman
as to be met at the depot by a deput,
ition, from all eonservitive cirgants-.
ations, of the city and vicinity, ,' and.
- accompanied to the .drill shed'', by.
torch 'hearers,where an address Will
he presented and Speeches delivered.
• A ileinlaYof fireworks will be made
. in Champ Del.Mora. On the follow -
big evening Sir John, will be ban--
%.' • - . ‘
eteSted at the Windsor by the junior
• 4 onservatIvo Club':
, .A boy. named • Lileille, egad; dine;
residing with his father: at No. 349'
.• .3Volfe street, Montreel, died Sunday
merning from the effects, it appears,
' of chewing .taliaeco. !Os. Saturday
he was in play with his companions,
' and was quite merry, arid etijbyed
•himself as well as on other occasions,
but in the 'evening he complained:
vire seUeh. of pains in his atomise),
.and Voinited,• though from ..appeers
'Enloe lie had nothing in his stonmeli,
it. Watery e . re4 liquid being all
' d Al
' after going .tce bed ' he . e cterated; He Was
.given sense ' key, .but ' too* very
little ofitian
. '. seemed to ' sink . into a stupor.
About one o'clock on Sunday morn -
big being Asked ' to lidtA something
he. did not,. reply; and his parents,
considering him to hive gone quietly
to sleep; retiredfor the. night„ To-
wards live o'clock his hrether,.who
was sleeping with the "deeeased; hip
ported to awake and catching him by
the arm shook • bine. saying, '"Won't
you tellme something 1" ,but -receiv:-.
ing•no reply, and something in the
appearance of his brother alarming
. him, lie called. to his father that the
boy was dead. On the parents com-
ing to the bedside ther found that
the boy Still lived, his heart faintly
fluttirinee but aii they watched -he
gradually sank in death. He ad
been in the habit, his companions
state, of chewing tobacco eery freely,
althoughfort/hided to do so by his
parents, and to.. this 'practice , his
death is attribtited, ''' ' '
. .
..
AMERICAN. ,
Tibbals Clark, aged 20, visited the
.anatomical museum in New 'York,
and at the sight of one of the wax
'figures ho fainted and ' fell against
the. caiiie, breaking the glees. by
which he was tevetely cut about the
throat atia face. Ho will probably
' die.
• . •
Ai Leadville, Co' torade the snow
is three feet deep On the level,. and
ore heeling ie•9suspended. Drifts.,
ten feet deep are piled, up in the
street*, and "beeiberits is practically
suspended. Many othinti have been
crushed by the weight of anow•and
a fierce wind is blowing.
.', While; James Lymen, of tireWit
County,. I,n(1., who was noted for his
profanity, wee' peering forth a vol.
hey of bean ft fete 'dive ago, he was
stricken to the eirth. His eight
WM clostrey!ti, his apetedi Was gene
and Metien impossible. After thirty
Minutest prostration- ' lie teeceetred
Slightly bet was tiotible to regain .
bit. epee& Hi u olio Wei* 440
dimmed. He hiss Mute been in a :
half etineigiena condition.
Selina gelke Miller dienri Phila-
delphiaaea SaturdatV% loth She end
h
•
eUSINES8 DIRECTORY-
• . ... .
guettontering. .
. .
(Oritttge.,..•
• . . .. . ., . •
lionsAmt. .
-
• • . .. :
lux WELK S. DOINGS* . .
. . , CANADIAN.
' . 7.- lie'kVen .. A rclideactintisTellee died
, ' „ • . . ,
Ian ween at the advanced age of 79.
.ne 9ffininted in
and on the Indirlanrittels°evrdvetaiwniltshiliiiPt
Sect loft fo• at leastAfty•years.
, , , . ••
' During th• e •fiavigation .season Oh
the great lakes just (drilled there
were in. all 191 disasters, sixty one
on Lake Michigan,. thirty -ohs on
Lake Superiol., .forty-tbree. Ott Lake
Huron, thirty-six on LakeErie and
nineteen Oh Lake Ontario, - Nearly
....
all ,the loot vessels were stranded,
. • .
When the Indiana_ with the
. ' „. . .• . . . .
.Egyphian expedition inlet their boats
in Canadian Style into the rapida at
Dol on the Nile and Went through
the seething waters in safety the
native& and EgYetiaEgyptianssteed on the
ban k and Mar/mired with uplifted
. ,
eyes and bated breath, "God is
great,»•
A tailor named Samuel Sidereal,
, , .„ • , ,, , , , ,
HI8 Wile two a son Ofgea three and a
1.
halt ve'rries were arraigned for
, •
druokennesdat the Montreal Record-
er'a 'Oeurt. When the polige ^wore
.
- called into the house lying helplessly
inebriated on the floor,Pthe child be.
illg 118 °vetthlm° a.'3- his Paren t'I'' It
appears Meerum ie a. wealthy real
estate owner, hni. h and eh, better
--- -6 ----
half are addicted to liquor, and wheYi
• , . . . - . . .
the father ot the boy is Indtaging he
given his ton ardent spirits to drink.
The Nu/ t fined Alio patents.
` A young gio,. i native Of County
Armagh, Irelaralorsele to Montreal
tW,O YeartVigo. On the eteattritt On
made tile atqnsilittande bianne wht)
isubt,,,oetritly' maitled her. They
.. . . .. „ •
Wore eying happily in aftintroiti
When, one morning lint ,Week, ells
•
received ii letter .asking her hens
1%1)6 W1110440•61104: ale 'belied de*
,,, .‘,"'"7:'•......, . ...7
&CIE tiVilid , ed lila : cuttoot)). 100'
• •
gentiotrg.
-H,.. W. BALL, ,
uCTIQNEER idr. Huron County, Sales at-
A tended Coin any part of the. county. Ad.
Arose orders to PODEMpll V. O.. . V.17. • •
'
-. , . , , • I
i L...0. Li No. 710 t•
-.,,,f,c, •. •_...• ...........,......_____
1 ' !, .,' qt--)A...1.s..c.4 IN , :. •
,,,,, • • ' . ''
., (gi:4 ; 1,._, tfeets sneern 3,70:4ka.V.. Of OVirY
, •,-,,, ••- month. mai ,upstalm• opoodt,
• (4„... •' • hoTon Ilall. Visifingpretliren
..„._•,,- '..„,,,,„ alwaya made welcome,
-7,-•
A, m..1.0.0D '.4 • 0, autm.x.,D,A1,. .,
^, . • .: '•• • , SCO''„,""
' • '
. . ,.
yr; THE village of lim.mtan, tbe•ditelling.
oineho7r heluindoel'qdreas1);Nilreirnd the' ymilclag. onfoarteula•
ne NIL 'rhos is a good stable, mithouses, and.an
•.m.:‘,_,
excellent soft water cistern on the premises.- • The
lot eoinprises i of on acre. 'Vile buildings are
in good repair. Will be sold cheap,:la, the lire,
prletor IS g.itillg up business. Ternmeasy, •
. . Apply to
. ' • • 'WM. DUNCAN '
.
.014 ..„,..4..,...,noicrave,'Ont.
• . • . .
'''••:=---- "EDWIN *KEEFE it ,..- _
-
••
,citAis. HAIIIIITON,
,
• A UCTI'diaali; lend, loan and Inenronee agent
"3„, -Blyth. Sales attended in tovrn and country,
m reasonable terms• A list offarms Mid village,
loti•for sale. Money to loan on real estate, at
low rates of interest, Insurance effected on all
classes of property.. Notes and debts collected.
Goods appraised aiul sold on commission. Hank.
ruptetoelm bought and told • .
• - !
eivel. bee.16, Man
qua*" um.*
3;)311;st'XIIIEI4t,,, ..
* ,
Late of Toronto, ironer Graduate lioial College
, . • ••,- . - . •
of Dental surgeons,
Coats' Blook - Clinton'
, ._ i •
Alt Wed( Regiatered. ' Charger Medicate.
- . .-•: . , .
... • . , . , .
,•
Vinlitg to cod
• •
ffiottiti .
*MONEY to LOAN
• ,..-
'At Iwo:Lies of Interest and upon terms to stilt
borroivers, • • • . , . „ . .
..-. .. . • ..
MAITNIG & SCOTT,
., • . •
. Beaver Meek, Clinton
Clinton, Istaelith,14.81, ' .„, 20
..
.. COMMERCIAL HOTEL.,
-
4' •
• ,
'Tble Hotel laturnifihed throughout with great
caret° meet the wants Of tho travelling 'public.
CeMmodious sample room/I.-The. bust of liquors
and cigars are always kept at the bar. Geed
table. Best situated tiotei hi Clinton. ONO IS& .
a II. •
A.S.' elti0011E Proprietor.
(*ton..401 e' 7th, 1.882. : ' .
' ••
, .
•
*Oliva.
... , • •
• -
• •Zettrlitttry.
,
.•
•
pn. ItERVE. ' Office, Pattenbury Street, im.
mediately behind Itaneford's balk atera•
iteridebee0Ooslte theremperanee Iltail, limn
Street. Office hours from 8 km, to 6 p,in.
ciln.t"..7".141188.1' • . ' i'l .
. .
s , ..•• . .
'''' • J. E..BLAOKALLy .
, ‘ . * . ... .
- • - - .1. ,
Veterinary Surgeon
. P
. . • .
Graduate of the Ontario VeterinaryPai'College, To.
retire, havilig opened on oaks in ,ainton, Is.loweat
prepared to treat altillecasee of domestic
animate .onthe most modem Prin. ..•
. eiples. All operations carefully
. P %%WWI 1:411,11,Ty°11.11A'
• . ' - ni ht • .1. mode ') to"
• . •. . g ' " .' „ ra .
Orrrou,-..-.1st door West of ken-
nedy's Hotel, Clinton, Out. V-17.
it/rOXEY to lend lit largo .or email sums, 00
illillgelid mortgagee or pars, nal teurityL at
current rates. 1. 0 Ar,E heron St
,46-
talcum,
Chiston,.1.4eb:2.5, laSt: ' 1.1v.
, •
. . ,
d,.
.
.
• . '
PRINCE OF WALES NOTE!.
.---
___....
• • . :.•
MANNING & SCOTT,
..
lierreiten,•Setielsore.e,onvenheers, •ic Cent,
inititiOnera for Ontario and MinIttills. . • .
. , Office-ToWn :Him, Otfirron.
Or .
anion, Ito irta, 180. . se ,
.
'' ''' '
The above hail bat( lately been leased•hv the
endereIgned, Tho premisen. have been refitted,
and the beat poSslblo accomniodation for farmers
end the general travelthig VAN le afforded,
Urge stables in connection. The armI•e supplied
' with the hest liquortland agars. Yourpatronage
tonoti,es. Veterinary Stligeon.in votinection. • '
oco,THEOBALD, Proprietor,
Clinton, May Srd, MN. - 286-ly ' -
,
-7,
• '''
• ,.E.
Z .-1
<C.
0'.
G,.
g .
Z: .
0 ,
.ti
!Mtiffibiriellefifiefeen.18110110910*ei
g / I Log .
p..,..., , p„, ,
V.I°:%1,- . /9 • ^
' 0 •5 a
1 la..4. „.. Cin . 1
2 4 . V rs .= Co Q ,
.--.
O'id •°, t-: l'O. .B
*-4,g, . „r•Ii-e A r"I'
0
it,. t.4g i i ' a .• P,
a ' --'1 •
0 . ,0 •
Era I.; a . . . .„4 , op
.1 - 2
.-
I . 14 1 1 1 VI I
A „,. "
0 i N .-. 1 ,,i,
% t 4 1 1 I
4* 'e ... A 4 .. °
A' 1 .
efor 00ate or tio, get.
*
Photographers
-
•
. • , -
WAVERLY HOUSE.
' •
L. •
THIS IfOTEL IS Ntiv and boa ail the romans.
..„ta of a ii,st.cia., hook. Large and al*,
ram% elegant parlors, booted with not Mi., , in
the immediate vicinity et the C. T. R, Deeet,
me bar le well stookedwlth the ohdieest brands
et Noon and elves. The tesielline nubile Inv
rest :waited ..$ being well . eared for at this
bouts, , .. SiNtirt "OM
ton*, mo It• Wit' ghll'••ropn:slor)r•
_... .. „ . . ..
. .
, D. A. ,FORRESTER, •
r;Ii• ' •
piONVgrAtiosIkAilolp, 08.. __ANCE, in
v_fileyeati Acra..vr. • tat Mono tt• Loots,
.
Otfiast...Eiliavar alba(' Clinton. Alat
•• e
...s., .
CY-D
. , tit .
,
vetoil
up, - Cf.....
•
Life Size Portraits a &oda*.
,:- , • , . , . t ,
*11- k
„
ihatiasittintrelt, hirrators.&e• & , amt.
rich Ind Witikhana• C. Seaga, Jr.,'cesterielt,
J. A. Merton Win:thaw, 1.1y.
- '
• • .
, . _ . .. .
TO THE PUBLia,
-
A...*
,
• •
. _•. ..
0 ..... fo ........ .. .
hitarblo WOrKS
. .
.;•... -
•
I 'NV14104400 •U'ri,. 110ifEnt.0140,t4
flentrri A st•ot the aerldrich Rarble
Mt uitl. wan 0 fil SureM• .
Seer +0 kVQ*A•1,14•
..
..
91
sti.19,
.
jaivusett•&•101014TOSTilxv.'"chitiso,ityit
tioassrost ,„otees.ovest etreet• neat
of 44§ reit'Opos, G5aarlaho Ont. , . 67,
. -..... . ..„_
' ' vutoteittr,
•••.•:, .........• .... 4,..1.,
. ,ii :Aim hone:to ' es Nam iotithfral
• WM, Oat •
wrimed.Wablaregrai
0soee./ I traterteleurrat lowest rate/ref mortar,.
, , % , ... •
. , .., ...
- • • . • - ..
(*mama- tetter.,_ ga. *4, A. V. a A M.,
4,..1 ' meets every Friday, on or . after theiuli
moan. Visiting brethren.eordiany Molted.
1, 1011144,w. N. A.1/61ttithltitegi kb.
............„.,........_,,,,,_,_______Cfint""7"' 14' 2"1' . • .. '''- 1!*
'
l'sltSir gtSVIIIG MACHIN FOR
. • $Atr;
.......11•
4.••••••• •to4r.*.c.•th. otthirs• tei•nOtk•••1 ••ri„
IN mat-trelardrtirizii I/74a'; .1;;;;I
usa;t6til 0 hail w8tkohnoiloit (6.001
than Isq•fat Atusbi 64 e‘twair• , • . , .
Jet obtroketitter, atter-net tielletor to
,'• 040, ftnreitaneort ,te. 016ce over
se• rie the nein Innerly IWO.
!e1 Sp et dataptra.
=-,-...,,...........
. bact nave tree, t cosestes
,,, . : , gef gattitahlth wilMil'alli•
•oc saheb Aisa,ta estita IiiiSh4V eess .
Minna refused ell medicine, saying
Jena would heal her. Her him
band, after reading a portion of the
Scripture :4 laid his hands on her
and anointed her, When lie awoke
in the morning she' was dead. At
the increst to -day a physician testi.
Sled that a simple remedy of oil
taken at the proper time would here
eared'her.
Richard Cope, Connecticut &two
painter, died a few days ago. Be
had been sick two years with a pe -
cellar disown,. His bones bad sips
parently turned to chalk, One of
his arms bad been broken several
times recently by merely raising it
from his bed.
' Rudolph Schicke,a discharged book-
keeper, of Cincinnatti, was called
to the tore of his former employers
and charged with defalcation to the
extent of 01,000. A constable pre-
sent arrested him. Mickel obtain-
ed permission to goiime an adjoining
room, and returned and dropped
dead, having taken a dose of cyanide
of petaseiuin, He was to have been
married the next day,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• Bit IT1S0-.-FOREIGN.
At ':Ballyduir the vault of 'Col,
Hillier, formerly Inspector general
of police, was broken oyen and Mrs.
Hillier's coffin wits tagen out end,
thrown intd- a glen, , •
,
L'47Lord',Itoaehergitea-2w,:eitten40•A_,
-fremberof peeriewitli,e,"view-te.stak., -
ing concerted action in'fever of the
reform of the house of 144-,
The crofter tenants of the Duke
of Argyle on the island of Thee
refuse to pay, rent and are extendinghe
their crofts. TDuke has .asked`
for an arnied force to protect Insrights, and a company of marines
has been sent to repress the rebel -
Hoop tenents.
A' Contra Account. •
Si; Richard Cartwright 410.$ pre.
seated his docount, and Sir Lewis
ard Tilley, at the Convention in
Toronto last week, produced a con-
tra accennt, and gave the following
irrefutable figures to show the
progress of Ithe country -its ins
crease in Wealth, coupled with de-
crease. taxatioin,•
The Governinent had nude:enquiries
about the, state of the nesnufacturingin-
dustries. • Agent Lenten; now in Toronto,
:who iiad been employed. in obtaining the
information, had° given him figures with
reference:to about onednireof them. In
1878, ii; those industries,. t.here.were 26,-
785 hands employed ; in 1834 40,678 -an
increase of 23,914:., Wages.paid in 1878,
$7,729,000; in 1884, $15,626,500 -an in-
crease of $7,794,600: The value of products
'in 1878, was $32;855,000 1084, $91,32,5-,
100 -an increase of $58,771,70.0. The cap ,
ital einployed.in 1878,was $24,363,000; in,
1884, $44,067,000-7-A-. increaseof$19,714,•-;
600. Ile recited a numberof other facts to
to show thegreat benefits 'which had been
conferred on.the country. Sir Richard Cart-
wriglithad referred to the increased taxation,
and had stated that he, (Sir 14.1.011cll'd) had
cliarged, Mackenzie Government with
extras siending $22;506,00,
whereas lie himself now asked for thirtyniib
lion. He had suppressed the truth Ito (Sir
Leonard), , had v
neer Said what die was
ellarged with, but had said thrit'had Sir
John's Government been iwpoWer. between
1872 aoil 181_S they woulknot have spent
'there on an average'than twenty-two and
a half ' Tlie increased expeedi-
turn have been caused Partly by increased
facilities in the Post Office, and one
Million and a -half had been doe to -in-
creased expenditures on. the • railways,
which, 116a:ever, both' returned to. the
Government much larger increased sums
than the increased expenditures.. He re-
cited a large number or figures, all show-
ing that the taxation Was actually lighter
than it had,.been. • The Mackenzie adtubi-
istration had not collected enough money
to pay their expenditures, and that was
claimed. as being good finance. During
the time Sir Bides& 0:ate/light was fin.,
anCier the interest. paid. Per head or Popu-
lation was $1.57, but this vas -dew at
least ten cents lower: It had been stated
that he had only obtained thisaneterni
for his' lo'an .had been obtained• .
Richard Cartwright. He had had some
'Ivrea properly prepared, and Me (Ver.
encebetineen the terms of the two was SO Peat
ant the interest would pay off the whole
'debt in Afty live years. Dining the
Whole of the contests in -the United States
there had never been .a single maa on
either side -no. matter what his polities.,
Might be --who would' over say anything
aiainst his country. linfortiinatly there
was 'a party here who both on the plat-
form and in their papers, had &cried the
coiititrY.'
'
A Lively Ghost .
The English correspondent •of an
American newspaper writes i -Quite
a sensation wee mimed one eveuieg,
during the /hay of the.iteremier of
Canada in Ebglan41; in the drawing
robin 'Of a well-known leader of
English politieal society. She had
gathered around her the shining
lights of the, Conservative world,
and at inidniglitritria the buzz of
converiration was highest, there tame
a Sudden and mysterious silence.
All looked up to discover the cause,
and sa* standing in the doorway an
old gentleman with a grey curl On
his forehead, eye glare/ in band,oel
iiig tho orowd, The look, gait, curl,
attitude, etoop, eye glass, wore those
of Dieraeli, firs t and last Earl of
Beationstield, The snvestrtlek glance
'contiheed,,, for BOW illOtilaht,6, and
nleny in the aittotoblage, thought
for a dniment that the wraith Of the
deed pritimi protorer hod returned
to set mattere fright io floillierT
vetive camps When the old Man
mingled the etovtd, hOetetlet,
and waeletiotiuted, it Wee food
that ha iros 141r4ohn
CLEAN DIEC)RInt
Sir David Illaepherson at the
Premier's Dalnittlet.
••••••••••••••••,.00.,•••
TWO POLICIES IN CONTRAST. •
•••,•••••••••••• ••••
Replying to the toad of "The
5Iinietry of Canada," at the banquet
of Sir John Macdonald, Sir 'David
Macpherson said : ft is a gratifies;
tion for me- to be present to night
to do honor to the leader of the Com
eervative party. It must be parti-
cularly gratifying to our leader,
after having allawn his ability to
carry out the wishes of his support.
ern'in Parlianient, to receive as he
has been receiving for the last two
or three days, the approval of them
who iiiiileubtedly repreient a large
majoiity in the Province. (Chem.),
flie administration of public **die
has been Unquestionably able; the
policy which he inaugurated lias
proved a signal success in inereas.
ink theprosperity of the country
arid augmenting the wealth of the
People. (Loud cheer.) It. iu for
you to see to it that therealiall be
no falling away in the support of
our leader, awl that the policy
which has produced such benefits
throughout the country, and has
httellep,pl'Oved
be " Coudapihniae.)
What baa been done ,by the Ad-
ininietrittion is *known to you; all
they have accomplished is before the
country. (Hear, beim), I need not
recount i$ you any.of their acts,, but
I will tell you what you need not
apprehend; You need not fear the
disclosure of adminietratiVe . blun-
ders, \ like, for instance, the costly
stliel rail blunder of our predecessor.
'(lpplaSeq.); Nor will you be asked
LC solve SPriililern so difficult as the
nayigaticin cite: magnitieent , water
stretches -00040-64e end of
which is lower by four hundred feet
than the other. 1V1iiiiieeta will not
have to ask for forgiveness for bay,
mg dug a .pit like the Fort'',•aiices
lock, and, burying hundreds of
thousands of dulhirs therein: _Nor.
have we to hide •such a .job as the`
Georgian Bay branch of the Can•
id is n Pacific Railway. Nor- will
the blush of shame ever be brought
to the face of Ministers and their
Supporters by the discovery of -such'
acorrept and. scandalous job as the,
printing job of the late Administrie.
tion, in which 'even members of the
Government were cetnpromieed; and
which cost two of theist ,and . the
Speaker of the House of •Counnoris
their seats in that House. That
printing job was „ope Of the most
disgraceful that could be perpetrats
ed by a venal and unclean party,
(Loud. chnera.)-
eta
Atari Mc
tintcoNirnX
roma, reasterieg yin **Oslo tied (tidai.
en
ska osilm
y be ooed . linen of Oat
keelson. year
;tannins* weed!. itsges.;- Mtgetc
111-
IiiIIks pad vbwthietwke of 1040
are relieved. et same while tint iyviii
woo of oetiediesi, pale en. jellasavetto
etineved. Noes rueihrosa eseeli .beeselei
Ind noes ore se .mamectly gritotel, tees
skew seek in in, me reetuametaliet
flepiiitters.vie MOW
. A Postai Caret fitiitY.
no* sesetort with :Cawawl urinary
Treeto_.
"Fel twelve yeers
After trying eil tile &Oen Aba I attlit
Mediellied I nutita wai 4.1104,44 two hv't
ties of nep•
4,10itiosi- •
And I am perfectly clired. I keep it
"All the timer reapectfully,
Booth, fientsberry, Teez.=-41ay 4, latil
lastaareart. Pa, 1t.ftr8t 3#75--
14 has, :urea me ef Several Masses smocka.
a(' OtektifeiS tIO latiech„.
reoethly troahlee,, etc. I Isavo AKA Sees
aleb day Ma year, shiee I took Hop Bit-
ters, all my keigblkAit use thotti„ Mks,
rANNIE 0,8111.41.
;Mimi* gi•o;
"A tots to Elver that cent me
"do roe less geed than one bottle or
"flop Bitters; the/ also (mad my wife mit
"fifteen yokes' herveus weakness, sloCk•
"leasness and elyspepais,"
, ' 111.,
• SO. BLQ0311WCYtt.YE• (1.1 May t•
SI its --I laws Neu suffering ten years.
and I tried Hop Bitters, and it done mai
more good than all the doctors,
Mtsa S. S.
Baby sawed,
...We are so ithaukfidtesty Met wer
uneaint balttle„4:-Pri*fibtP1i.E.:1410'04 at a .
dasigeiers snit' protneted einsetspatioa mid
irregularity, Cr the beiveli b1rth. use ve
Hop Bitten by its mother, whii,uils et the -
same Gees reStOrOd her tO•porfeet health,
and strength.
--The parents', Rochester, N..1%.
Nope genuine without a hunch of
green Hops on the white label. SIAM al
the rile, poisOnous'stuff with "flop" aic'
"flops" in their name ... -smat;
•
VIRGINIA OUTRAGES.
• -
An Old Man Tortured With
Hot Iron and Roiling Oil.
The second horrible crutrage and
robbery by hooded highwaymen in the
past three claps has roused the peo
pie of Wheeling; Virginia, to a ter -
tibia pitch. On Sunday six masked.
' inert entered the house of Mrit.'W•or--
honour,. in the suburbs, and after
horribly beating the family stele
$5,000 in geld. Last night four men,
evidently of the same gang,, broke
into the house of Elijah Martin, a
bachelor, miser in tile county.. Find
leg only $182 on his person they ter-
ribly tortured him, to .fOrce him to
even' the hiding plitee' of zhis gold.
He was tied to, a bedpost, stripped,
and a red het ticker applied to his
back and thighs in twenty places,
Hot, oil was also poured down 'his
back. • His sufferings were terrible.
In their anger the burglars struck
their victim a heavy • blow on the
head and lett him' bangiug by the
fastenings in an insensible condition,
where he• was:found nearly' frozen.
His condition is critical. Martin
is 60 years of age. All efforts to lo-
cate Sr capture-. the gang seem time-
less.
Stranger than Fiction.
• Tweety three years ago Ambrose
Sterling, 'a St:etch/1mm, occupied
position ib one of the village mills
of Amsterdam', N. Y. his family
consisted of it wife end mm daughter,
20 years of age, and noted toiler
• beauty, In year a young Man
named Jobe' 8herevie came to he
•vill •Ige. He gabled the affections
(if Miss Sterling against the Will of
her parents, and eloped -With her to
Syriscuee,- no soon proved to be
a professional gambler, and in a
few days abistelomel. her, 'She de•
termined not to return house, anti
'Went to work as s domestic in a
hotel near Utica.- Her parents, after
fruitless efforts to ' discover her
whereabouts, gave up their seareli
and returned to their native laud,
where they died a few years ago.
About a your after her kiopement
'Miss Stirling was employed at a'
Port riohi how, whehe she Met
Robert Jennings, a farmer, of Gal*
loway, Saratoga County, wile wea
bachelor. He took her to his losthe
as his hots-4404)er, end afterwards
Married her. A "daughter was bOrli
to them a year afterward. Laat
summer a tramp came to -the Jens
Mori mansion and 'begged shelter
for the night. lie turned out to be
„none other than 'John ',Sherwin.
Mrs. Jennings .poratritied Wm to
silence silo their -limner relations,
and Mr. Jennings gave bin) WOW
611 the farm. ne gained the ea&
'Mons Of ars. Xenia*** deuithter,
thou SO vete of age, and th* two
eloped two *reeks ago. -The heart
broken mother teefeeetel her *Ivy.
*frordoeus to her hookend, and he,,,to
her great J4* folly forgave este.
showia and hi* wife are living en
, hortk•Weat
Placing the yield at 25 beanie,
the, actual cost oU produoing....alleat-•,.-
in Manitoba iid tlffitNiirtlfWest
Sot down at 52.1 cents a bushel.
The whole cost, would be as follow-:
Planting, 420;$harvesting; $1.29 ;
threshing. $1.96; cleaning and mar-
keting, $2.45 -total, $11.81 or, in •
round figures, 5:11 per bushel.' This -
at the price at one time eerrent,
was a very discouraginietatement,
but the prices haye sheet improved
considerably. Here is theisierker.
price lint of -wheat in Winnipeg, awl
at different polies thaughaut the
•
coentry taken from the :--
,
Wheat, No. 1, 'hard , •
Whent,'No. 2, bard lits
Wheat, NO. 1, ...... 00
Wheat, No. 2, regu la r., .......... 5 I,
Wheat; No.' 3, reviler,
The prices paid for No1 H asit
in the different points of the Pre-
vinceAre as follows
Marden •00
High Bluff • rot
Gretna
•Portr go la Prairie
Brandon • 58 •
Carberry58
s •
SStonewall• . L
Virden
MeDoriald
Xlkhorn55
A lexander.,..... ..... ... ..
... r 7
Wolseicy'•
52
Douglass.... 58
Neepawa
Emerson 60
.
• Morris fill
Clutter 57
Sensible Deliverance •
A'deliverance of' Sir Andrea, Clarke
:on' Alcohol reproduced by the Neil •
seeneteabout as sensibleand as trust-
worthy as Anything that has been
Said tine!) that Subject. Sit...Andrew
tells us that he Ins made the ques-
tion his special :study: - ;Be pronoun.
-Ceti on the :•jene hand' that alcohol is
not in erdinery eines necessary tie
health, Mir is 'it nutritious or bele-
ful..to nutrition. On ,ilie•other li 'ml
he tells us that tokenin small
titles at dinner' or. supper, it catinOt
be proved. to do it• man .any harm,
physical, Mental, Moral or
afhe world," he adds, "is not so full
of :gladness that we should ri.fuse_
small ..ipiaritities to those vierii
gladness 'fromit, though the testi.
alcohol People take the better." A. ,
euf; of tea is net nutritious or helpful
nutritien, eerie a pipe of tobacco;
but hotss of them soothe, and to
vexed litiminiry soothing is almost, as
necessaryas.nutrition. A ,glassl of
wine may bet be .a substitute • for .
bread or meat 1. bilt, RS the Scripture •
says, it makes glad the heart of man.
Taken ipionipany, it giiieS a fillip ta
• his elimiel feelings and disposes him •
to good fellowship. prohibitionist&
aim,' in effect, .at. the extincition of
coevitiality. Perhaps • conviviality ,
may be destined sonic day to disap,
pear before theprogress of intellete-
tual refinement; • Perhaps :every.
attendants and net only evese stimu• •
lent, butcookery that temptsappe,
tfte and makeeAtirig pleaaant„.„.eas•,_„
',Wally at ft. -Cheerful beard, may in
, time. be discarded .as gees:mesa and
become a memory of the uncivilized -
past. ' Mail may tirow so spiritual in
to lhait hinnelf, like an eremite, to
the amount absolutely necessary of
the plainest food. Nay, the vision Of
the eotatist may be realised, and it
'May bedtime the CuStomto hide as
shameful the cravings of the animal
nature end tOleat, only. in secret. At
present Mab, in the'words of plaip..
spoken moralist, requires 'mine -sells
suet pleasure, and if he is shut out
from it by one door he will Open 14
himself another. He is not taking it
In word form when at. his phrist
MO board 116 fills a temperate glees
to the health ,of all friends, present
ebent.. Total abstittelietip even
et the Christmas board, May be the
Counsel of sanitary perfection
Andrew Clarke rams 65 intimate as
Much; 1:kit-we have mo right, nor
shall we find it preetiothio, to force
our counsels Of AiFrietitiOil on our
neighbora.41iystentiet' in The Week.
• ' ,
Olt Wiiitt A. vi,Jtshe t
Will you heed the trerolne. Tho
eignel,ptitheas of the Mt* appros,Cli of
that timro tetrihle Milli* 000sT/est0460'•
Ask Itinnariree irrnt can eibta.fottlie
*aka be fittiliir fetitett in 043`40
Statdo itothitt for It. We neenftemo
etontenuethet-ShnoMecunt Wili Aate
your Conga. Zr sever Aida, Tian-
• herbs *hy.Mere thea a iltlIiiut Pot -
we .011 petit yeer. IWee*
bblutat ebb* as be.